Strong growth in U.S. crude oil production since the fourth quarter of 2011 is
due mainly to higher output from North Dakota, Texas,and federal
leases in the Gulf of Mexico, with total U.S. production during the first
quarter of 2012 topping 6 million barrels per day (bbl/d) for the first time in
14 years.

After remaining steady between 5.5 million and 5.6 million bbl/d during each of
the first three quarters of 2011, EIA estimates that U.S. average quarterly oil
production grew to over 5.9 million bbl/d during the fourth quarter and then
surpassed 6 million bbl/d during the first quarter of 2012, according to the
latest output estimates from EIA's May Petroleum Supply Monthly report (see
chart below). The last time U.S. quarterly oil production was above 6 million
bbl/d was during October-December 1998.

The roughly 6% growth in U.S. oil production from October 2011 through March
2012 is largely the result of increases in oil output in North Dakota, Texas,
and the Gulf of Mexico. After passing California in December 2011 to become the
third largest oil producing
state, North Dakota then jumped ahead of Alaska in March 2012 as the state
with the second largest oil output [Please see remarks below -- D.R.]. Texas remains far ahead in the number one
production spot. [Full story]

Saturday, June 16, 2012

by Stephen J. Lee, Inforum, Grand Forks, May 14, 2012
North Dakota passed Alaska in March to become the second-leading state in crude oil production, trailing only Texas, according to officials from Alaska and North Dakota.

It’s been a dramatic rise for a state that was behind seven other states in 2006 in terms of oil production.

North Dakota produced an average of 575,490 barrels of crude oil every day in March, another record, and up from 558,255 barrels a day in February, according to Lynn Helms, director of the state’s Department of Mineral Resources. The crude is coming from a record 6,636 wells, up from the previous record of 6,450 set in February.

The number of rigs drilling in the state was at 208 on Monday, about where it’s been for eight months, including a record 212 drilling for a day or two earlier this month.

North Dakota’s new record output of crude surpassed the steadily declining output of Alaska, which saw its production fall to 567,481 barrels per day in March, down nearly 15,000 barrels from February’s daily average, said Stephen McMains of the state’s Oil and Gas Conservation Commission on Monday.

Meanwhile, Texas’ production has been rising by 12 [11? -- D.R.] percent since September, to 1.72 million barrels per day in February, the latest figures available from the U.S. Energy Information Administration, which tracks state and federal crude oil production. Meg Coleman, a geologist with the EIA, said preliminary figures make it appear Texas’ production increased in March [Texas produced 1.755 million barrels per day in March 2012, according to preliminary EIA figures. -- D.R. Please see also "Texas Crude Oil Production, Jan 2007-Jul 2012" -- D.R.].

Fueled by the Bakken [shale play -- D.R.] boom in the Williston Basin in the western part of the state, North Dakota’s oil production has nearly quadrupled [sic] since March 2007, when it averaged 118,103 barrels per day.

In December [2011 -- D.R.], North Dakota’s crude production eclipsed California for the third ranking; California produced 540,000 barrels a day in February and it will remain about the same when March figures are released later this month, said Gordon Schremp of the state’s energy commission [California produced 538,000 barrels a day in March 2012, according to EIA -- D.R.].

The top four producing states – Texas, North Dakota, Alaska and California – accounted for 55 percent of the nation’s February total crude output of 6.144 million barrels a day, which also includes about 1.4 million barrels per day produced from federal off-shore wells, according to EIA. [...]

Alaska has seen decreasing production for decades, since pumping out more than 2 million barrels a day in the 1970s [sic; in 1987-1988 -- D.R.]. [Read more]